Tatum v. Mohr

21 Ark. 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 Ark. 349 (Tatum v. Mohr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tatum v. Mohr, 21 Ark. 349 (Ark. 1860).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by Mohr against Tatum, in the Union Circuit Court, for breach of a contract warranting a slave to be sound.

The substance of the contract, as alleged in the declaration, is that on the 28th of January, 1856, the parties made an exchange of slaves. That plaintiff gave the defendant a slave named Alfred worth $1200, for a slave of defendant, named Henry, valued, at $900, and his note for $300, and that defendant warranted Henry to be sound in body and mind, but that he proved to be unsound and worthless, and that plaintiff was subjected to certain expenses in taking care of the slave, and for medical services, etc.

The defendant pleaded to the declaration generally:

1. Non-assumpsit.

2. That the slave Henry, at the time of the exchange, was sound.

3. That he was not unsound.

4. To the first and second counts — -that the slave was not unsound in body and mind.

5. To the third and fourth counts — the same'

Issues were taken to the pleas, the case submitted to a jury and verdict in favor of plaintiff for $1,088 damages.

The court overruled a motion for a new trial, and the defendant excepted and appealed.

1. On the trial, the plaintiff read in evidence a bill of sale executed to him by the defendant for the slave Henry, bearing date 28th January, 1856, warranting him to be sound in body and mind, ect., also two assignments upon the bill of sale, the first from the plaintiff to one Chipman, dated 4th February, 1856, and the other from Chipman back to the plaintiff bearing date the 10th of the same month.

These assignments were witnessed by one Hawley, and the court' permitted the plaintiff to prove his hand writing, and the signatures to the assignments, by another witness, after showing that the attesting witness was a resident of Illinois, and the defendant excepted.

The attesting witness being out of the jurisdiction of the court, the plaintiff had the right to introduce another witness to prove the execution of the assignments. Brock vs. Sexton, 5 Ark. 708; Wilson vs. Royston, 2 Ib. 319.

The assignment upon the bill of sale from Chipman to plaintiff was read in evidence against the objection of defendant; and it is insisted that it was inadmissible, because the bill of sale was not assignable so as to vest the right of action in the plaintiff, being a mere chose in action, and not, it is insisted, within our statute of assignments. If this position be correct, the assignment of the bill of sale by the plaintiff to Chipman did not vest in him the right of action upon the warranty, but it remained in the plaintiff, and the re-assignment of the bill of sale to him by Chipman did not prejudice his right of action. The proposition, that the bill of sale was not assignable, is not correct, or if it is, it proves too much for the purpose of the defendant. (19 Ark 461.)

2. Defendant proposed to prove by a witness (Sylvanus Scoggins) that the negro Alfred, which he received from the plaintiff in exchange for Henry, was of no value whatever, which the court excluded; and, this is assigned as the second ground of the motion for a new trial.

There was no issue in the case under which this evidence was admissible. If the plaintiff warranted the slave Alfred to be sound, or to possess qualities which rendered him valuable, and he proved to be unsound, or otherwise worthless, the defendant had his remedy by cross-action; or by appropriate plea, or special notice under the general issue, he might have availed himself of it by recoupment. McLure vs. Hart, 19 Ark. 119. In the absence of any such plea, or notice, the plaintiff might have been surprised by the admission of the proposed evidence.

Under the pleadings in the case, the measure of the plaintiff’s damages was not the value of the boy Alfred, but the difference between what Henry would have been worth at the time of the exchange of the slaves, if he had been sound, as he was warranted to be, and his actual value in his unsound condition (if proven to have been unsound) together with resonable expenses necessarily incurred by the plaintiff in consequence of such unsoundness, etc. Sedgwick on Damages 291. .

3. The third ground of the motion for a new trial is, that the court erred in giving the instructions moved by the plaintiff.

On the motion of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury first: “That the opinion of practicing physicians is good evidence on the points pertaining to their profession, and as such they will consider the opinions given by the physicians in this case.”

Several physicians who attended the negro Henry after the plaintiff purchased him, and before his death, gave it as their opinion that he was afflicted with hereditary scrofula, though they admitted that it was possible that they might be mistaken in their conclusion.

What the court meant the jury to understand by the opinion of the physicians being good evidence, and that they must so consider it, we do not know.

If the witnesses were skilled in the science and practice of medicine, it was competent for them to give their opinions to the jury in relation to the disease with which the negro was afflicted — its character, when it it was contracted, its effects, etc.; but the jury were the judges of the weight to be attached to their opinions, and this would depend upon their skill, experience, the examination which they gave the patient, their opportunities for observing the symptoms and effects of the disease, their mental capacity, etc., etc. Wharton Med. Jurisp. p. 77, and note. In many cases the opinions of professional men are entitled to great consideration and respect; in others but little, Ib.

If the above instruction had been the only one given by the court to the jury in relation to the opinion of the physicians, we should be inclined to think that they might have been mislead by it; but at the instance of the defendant, the court instructed the jury, “that the opinions of practicing physicians are not conclusive; and it is the province of the jury to give their opinions such weight as they think they are entitled to.”

The second instruction given at the instance of the plaintiff is: “That if the jury believe from the evidence that the boy Henry was diseased by scrofula at the time of the sale, and which rendered him afterwards valueless, and of which he finally died, they will find for the plaintiff the amount of the bill of sale, with six per cent, interest, and the expenses which they may believe from the evidence plaintiff had to pay for keeping, medical bills, etc.”

We have stated above, that in a suit upon a warranty of soundness of personal property, the measure of the damages is the difference between the value which the thing sold would have had at the time of .the sale, if it had been sound or corresponding to the warranty, and its actual value with the defect. The rule is so stated by Sedgwick.

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21 Ark. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tatum-v-mohr-ark-1860.